2019-04-01_Artists___Illustrators

(Martin Jones) #1

SOROLLA


CLOCKWISE FROM
BELOW Female
Nude, 1902,
106x186cm;
Young Fisherman,
Valencia, 1904,
75x104cm; And
They Still Say Fish is
Expensive!, 1894,
151.5x204cm.
All oil on canvas.



  1. DRAW TIGHT, PAINT FAST
    There is a real urgency to Sorolla’s handling of paint that
    makes hundred-year-old paintings still breathe with life in
    the gallery. “I could not paint at all if I had to paint slowly,”
    he once said. “Every effect is so transient, it must be
    rapidly painted.”
    From 1901 onwards, he created some 500 paintings
    in four years as he truly embraced a new naturalistic,
    luminous style. The artist was able to do this thanks to
    a rigorous grounding in drawing from an early age, even
    though he rarely made more than a few marks in pencil
    or charcoal on the canvas itself.
    Sorolla painted from life, often taking huge stretched
    canvases with him and setting up his tripod on a beach or
    in a field. “The great difficulty with large canvases is that
    they should by right be painted as fast as a sketch,” he
    opined. To achieve this effect, he scaled up his practice.
    When painting on supports measuring five or six feet wide,
    he matched that scale by using long-handled filbert
    brushes that forced him to stand further back and make
    the same sweeping, direct strokes as if painting on a
    smaller canvas with standard brushes.

  2. CONTROL THE TEMPERATURE
    A mastery of warm and cool hues is perhaps the greatest
    lesson that Sorolla’s work offers. Writing in Art and
    Progress in 1912, Duncan C Phillips Jr. noted that the
    Spaniard understood “that shadows are not brown and
    opaque, but transparent spaces of intercepted light”.
    Painting quickly outdoors on a large scale in direct,
    overhead sunlight was relatively unheard of during Sorolla’s
    day, so his ability to identify and capture the effects of
    reflected light were key to the success of his paintings.
    A painting such as Young Fisherman, Valencia is tightly
    cropped on the figure, yet the green and blue tints on the
    boy’s chest hint at his surroundings. Also pay particular
    attention to the way that he paints white clothing – while
    the overall effect is identifiable as ‘white’ fabric, the
    creases and folds are depicted in everything from soft
    mauve shadows to creamy yellow highlights.

Free download pdf